Reunited With Old Tools

Swanicyouth

New member
Ron's thread inspired me to post this. I quit wrenching sometime around 2000 and some of my specialty tools have been in storage. I haven't seen them until last Monday when I decided to unpack them and clean them up - as they were still as greasy and filthy as I put them away the last time I used them.

Some favs:

Snap-On SL710 1/2" drive ratchet (1986 date code):

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Looks pretty right? Well it was destroyed. I called Snap on Monday and they sent me out a rebuild kit (rebuilt today). Check out the old ratchet mechanism & dust cap:

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Stant ST270 12270 Colling System Pressure Tester:

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Outside of case was filthy and covered with grease from a grease gun dripping on it for 15 years (tool & inside were pristine). Obviously, I already "detailed" this tool.

OTC Ford Power Steering Pump Pulley Tools:

These were the only way to remove most Ford power steering pump in the 1990s. Prolly never use these again, but they have held up to like a zillion past uses good as new:

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OTC 7023 Tie Rod Sleeve Tool:

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Mandatory for adjusting toe on older Ford trucks and vans with steering boxes. I always liked this style more than the toe hook on a ratchet. Another tool that has held up to a million uses.

Snap-On YA 2222 5 Rack and Pinion Toe Adjustment Tool:

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Used this tool on so many alignments for a bunch of years and I always loved it. The hook part goes around the inner tie rod and the head pivots and ratchets to adjust front toe on FWD cars.

Blue Point YA9065 5 Rear Toe Adjustment Tool for 1990s Ford Taurus:

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The rear toe adjustments on this era of Taurus was always SEIZED! This was the only tool you remotely had a chance to turn them with. You would hook a half inch ratchet and like 4 foot of pipe as a breaker bar and swing from it with your feet off the ground - hoping they may budge. The ratchet might snap, the adjuster might snap - but the tool was bullet proof.

OTC Pickle Fork Set:

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This thing has been beat on to death and none of the pieces will break. It's just indestructible.

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Mac TR2587 5 Piece Wheel Stud Re-Thread Kit

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This thing was great because it would save you so much time if a car came in with a wheel stud where the threads were messed up. Instead of replacing the stud, and pulling the brakes and rotors - you could just re-thread it. Another tool that was covered in tons of thick grease. The whole case hd to be scrubbed with an SOS pad & cleaned with Brake Kleen.

Matco M-326 Trim Retainer Pliers.

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These were the original tool to remove door panels and interior trim held on by push pins when manufacturers started using them widely.

You know this tool is OLD (~1992) because it says: MADE IN USA... Matco has most of these type of tool manufactured overseas today.

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Mac Metric Impact Sockets 12-24mm

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I'm convinced these sockets are just unbreakable. Used them as sockets, to beat in bushings, etc... Never broke one. Looking at the case gives you an idea of how much use these saw.

Channel Lock 460 Alligator Pliers (the oil filter crushers):

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These things will either remove or destroy almost anything. Another company that was "Made in the USA", but has since gone to Asia for production:

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Hmmm...that coolant tester is a little newer than mine, all the parts on yours that are black crinkle-finish are chrome on mine. Does yours have the leather packing that needs to have a drop of oil in the end "periodically"? Or did they finally join the post-war era and put a rubber seal in there?
 
^ Yup. Mine has the two little holes and it tells you to add a drop of oil or two. I've seen the all chrome ones as well. Mine is circa 1993 I believe.

Added a few more.
 
Very cool thread! Especially the old Snap-on ratchet. That thing is awesome. When I was growing up, a close friends father was a mechanic and nearly every tool he owned was Snap-on. It was always fun to go over to his house when we were 16 and tinkering with our cars with his tools. I learned a lot in those days, and always wanted some Snap-on tools for myself. Maybe I can find one on eBay or Craigslist.
 
Even used snap on tools are very expensive. I own a few and you get what you pay for. I'm not a big wrencher at all but there is a difference and it easy to see once you know what your looking at.

Very cool thread! Especially the old Snap-on ratchet. That thing is awesome. When I was growing up, a close friends father was a mechanic and nearly every tool he owned was Snap-on. It was always fun to go over to his house when we were 16 and tinkering with our cars with his tools. I learned a lot in those days, and always wanted some Snap-on tools for myself. Maybe I can find one on eBay or Craigslist.
 
I have two tool boxes of my dads that my brother and I are selling. I enjoy looking thru that stuff. Brings back memories.
 
I don't think a lot of folks realize the expense involved in acquiring a good set of tools, including specialty tools. i'm a hack and mainly try to do my own auto/motorcycle maintenance. it pays to get the best you can afford to start with. brings back growing up memories with dad wrenching.
 
Thanks for sharing. My uncle is a tech, many years, and it's incredible how much he has invested in his tools.

Steve
 

Very cool.

If I am ever around garage and estate sales I always look for the old tools. I find some of them are the best quality and will last me forever. And if I'm lucky enough to get snap-on or old-craftsmen stuff I know what I have and the company backing it.

 
Swanicyouth- Hey, cool thread, thanks for posting it.

Though I will say that my first thought was..."what, '80s is "old?!?".

My favorite breaker bars and ratchets (yeah, Snap-On) were old when I got 'em in the '70s, and a great many of my tools were old when my dad bought 'em before I was born!
 
^ Snap On is awesome. I found a small "crack" or nick in the ratchet head metal and now they say they are sending me another one - and don't want the old one back.

I have a lot of other "old" tools that need some restoration. I'll update this thread as I get around to it.

Yeah, 1980s is now "old" or retro. It was 30 years ago already!!!!
 
Cool thread-Thanks for posting!

I grew up with a flat-rate mechanic (in the days before they were called technicians) for a father, so when I was turning wrenches on my bicycle as a child, the wrenches were Snap-On. Working with good tools is an addiction with no known cure. I've been working in Dealerships ever since college, in capacities from Service writer to General Sales Manager, so I accumulated my tools in the 70's and 80's, just the way the techs did, $20, $40, $50 a week to the guy on the truck.
My Dad's been gone for 20 years now and there isn't a project that goes on in my garage that doesn't get the use of a 50 year old tool from time to time. A couple years ago, I made a Father's Day project out of polishing off over 50 years of imbedded greasy handprints from my dad's two drawer middle section that's sandwiched between my 70's top and bottom boxes.
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I had folks posting on AGO telling me how people pay up for old Snap On boxes, but I'm not interested. I just hope my son and grandson appreciate the stuff as well as I.

Bill
 
^ that is an awesome box. From the little I know about Snap On, I think you can tell buy the underlining of "Snap On" that the box is pre-1960s. But I'm sure someone can chime in who knows more. Those vintage boxes are highly collectable - especially one as nice as yours.
 
Looking at the original post was like old home week for me. The tools shown are almost item for item found in my boxes too. What would we do without them?
 
Recovered another one today. The SK 45186 13.5" locking extension - 3/8" drive.

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I like this tool so much because you can put a socket on it and it won't fall off and get lost in the engine bay somewhere. The socket is locked on until you release the collar by pulling it back. Obviously, you can see I used it a lot.

SK tools are some of my favorites. This may not be "PC"; but when the SK guy came to my dealership, we always said "here comes the tart-cart"... because the SK guy's truck was so small compared to Snap-On, Mac, & Matco. SK tools are sill all made in the USA with lifetime warranties - they are cheaper than other tool truck brands with equal quality.

The funny thing is, this extension originally came with a roll pin to hold the locking mechanism on. But, eventually it drifted out. My idiot 20-something-year-old logic told me just to fix it by jamming a cotter pin in the hole and grinding off the the edges with a bench grinder - even though the tool had a lifetime warranty. Nonetheless, it held up to years of abuse with that cotter pin.

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I think I'm going to order a set of 1/4" locking SK extensions, just because I like this one so much. Snap-On & Blue Point also make a nice locking extension If I recall. I also recall the el-cheapo ones that released by just pushing in a pin just sucked - think Gear Wrench.

Maybe we should just turn this into a tool thread. Post up a picture of any of your favorite tools or any new tools? Any tool anyone likes that relates to cars at all... Detailing or mechanical.... Polishers, wrenches, or even and oil drain bucket. Just post some pics of what you use to work on your cars.
 
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